Be honest- what would you rate me as a photographer? I am asking becasue I want to get to the next level, keep in mind I have been using a point and shoot until this past weekend. I am now learing the dslr. If you have tips or advice please share. I know I am opening up myself to alot of differnt opions, but I am a big boy so I can take it.

My wife was a model for a long time and is now on the other side of the camera. Having been on both sides of the camera has really benefited her photography. Hundreds of photo shoots and every photographer made the comment if they took 500 shots they were looking for 5 good ones. Everyone is looking for something different so no matter what you take someone will like something.

Photography is truly and art and the best thing you can do for yourself is to take a photography course at your local community college. It's amazing what you can do with photo editing software these days.

My wife was a model for a long time and is now on the other side of the camera. Having been on both sides of the camera has really benefited her photography. Hundreds of photo shoots and every photographer made the comment if they took 500 shots they were looking for 5 good ones. Everyone is looking for something different so no matter what you take someone will like something.

What he said, but to add to that. You used to take alot of pics of people in the pits, kinda catching them off guard if you will, catching the moment of that end of the BMX scene. That was some of your best stuff. You always could catch the fun vibe in the shots.

On track, hard to say really because you are limited in lighting, angles, etc. i'll trll you what im tired of seeing... One single rider taking up the entire frame. All the blurring is a distraction as well. Its racing, candid racing shots are great. Get the faces, forget about the bikes, i would love to see some on track heat of the moment up close face shots. Expressing riders focus. Never see that. Its always full bike shots. Rather boring.

Thank you all keep it coming. My preference is pack shots guys all bunched up in a turn. Until I had the dslr it WAS hard getting a good one. I will also try to eliminate the backround. I have found it is easier when you know.your subject S well. Danny smith and Phil d are just two of the guys I know by heart. I am familiar with their ztyle. Really anxious to start snapping action shots.

By using a dSLR you'll be able to shoot in RAW.Then using the camera software to process the images. The data saved in the RAW files can help you figure out what settings you were using at the time. Valuable information to learn from. As well as save images that may have been a bit off in exposure or white balance.

I'd recommend a short seminar or something on the SLR camera so you can wrap your head around the mechanics of the thing.(I know you're just excited about another class (IMG:style_emoticons/default/tongue.gif) …)

Cameras are alot like riding bikes. Anyone can do it. But it takes time and practice to become really good at it.If you approach this like you do the bike. You'll have a blast.